Thanks to one of my FB friends, I was able to buy this little ghost visible next to this note. My Undead collection has grown again. This particular ghost is described as 'Sheet Spirit' and if I'm not mistaken, it was shown for the very first time in a flyer from January of 1988.

I think that, considering how basic this sculpt is, it took between 10 and 15 minutes of lazy sculpting after the lunch break to make this miniature;) Nevertheless, it looks all right between other ghosts from this period.

Painting such ethereals was described here, and on my desk is another Night Horror creature right now - after long period of having painter's block, I will try to paint something now... And finish some of the almost ready miniatures too...

Still Middle-Earth, still creatures of the dark, born from the evil and anger - Barrow Wights painted by my brother Mormeg. Painting was done exactly the same as the before, only pose of the miniature is different. To bo honest, the longer I look at the pictures, the more I'm convinced that the red, bloody glow around the eyes of this hatred-born creature is a right choice.

And as a kind of bonus, one photo of the third Wight, the same as the one already shown here few weeks before.

Mormeg tirelessly is expanding his universal undead army - part of Angmar forces for Lord of the Rings games by Games Workshop, full undead army in Dragon Rampant, and so on. The newest addition to the forces is today's undead knight. As the one shown before, it is a miniature of Morgul Knight.

Second of the Nurgle lesser deamons painted lately. I don't really like pose of this miniature, first one was much better in my opinion. Still, it looks ok once painted. Now I just have to find five more such middlehammer plaguebearers to make a full unit - unfortunately, I have just five such figures like the one shown here and I hate multiples of the same casts in such small bands.

This miniature is painted in a similar way to earlier shown Dead of Dunharrow, with two exceptions. First, it was undercoated white, DoD were just drybrushed white over black. Second exception is striking (at least I hope it is striking) armour - as miniatures are supposed to depict heroes for LOTR game or some kind od elites for Dragon Rampant. Hence the idea to distinguish them from the ranks of grey... errr... green infantry, by painting their armour in a more traditional way.

And, as I need eight such miniatures for War of the Ring (yet another game which I likely won't play) - I will punish readers with more such wights in a near future.